Planning for the future

Planning for the Future

On the 12th March the government published a policy paper ‘Planning for the Future’ which sets out its plans for housing and planning following announcements in the 2020 Budget.

The paper starts with a reaffirmation of its support for home ownership and its commitment to re-building a home owning Britain. It also promises that young people and future generations will have the same opportunities as those who came before them.

The Government set out its plan for four publications:

  1. A new White Paper on planning reform
  2. A building safety bill
  3. A renter’s reform bill
  4. A social housing white paper

The government acknowledge that it does have a role to ensure security of tenure for those who do not own their own homes and the need to prevent homelessness and build more affordable homes. A social housing white paper will look at social housing and the needs of tenants while the building safety bill will ensure tighter building control and possibly reforms of the system to prevent a repeat of Grenfell.

The government wants to promote more development where it is needed. New proposals include:

  • Encouraging increased densities in urban areas
  • £400m for brownfield regeneration
  • Creation of a national brownfield map and a call to build above railway stations
  • Changing the formula to calculate local housing need in and around urban areas to deliver 300,000 new homes
  • New permitted development rights to build upwards on existing buildings by the summer of 2020
  • Consultation on new permitted development rights to allow demolition of existing vacant commercial, industrial and residential buildings and their replacement with well- designed new residential units
  • Support for self-build and community construction
  • Support for the Oxford Cambridge Arc including a new spatial development framework and up to 4 new development corporations

The government wants to ensure that sufficient land is available to deliver homes where they are needed:

  • All LPAs to have an up to date Local Plan in place by December 2023
  • Raising the housing delivery test to 75% in November 2020
  • Reforming the New Homes Bonus

The government pledge a commitment to ‘infrastructure first’

  • Investing in infrastructure to unlock up to 70,000 new homes
  • Creating a new £10bn single Housing Infrastructure Fund

The government want to speed up the Planning system by:-

  • Maximising the potential of new technologies
  • Reforming planning fees to ensure that planning authorities are properly resourced.
  • Rebates where planning applications are successful on appeal
  • The government will act to make it clearer who owns land to encourage the build out of sites
  • Expanding the use of Local Development Orders to simplify granting of planning permission in selected areas.
  • Improving the effectiveness of Compulsory Purchase Orders to aid land assembly and infrastructure delivery

The government wants to help first time buyers by:

  • The ‘First Homes Scheme’ will lower the cost of many new homes by a third and the discount will be locked into the property in perpetuity
  • Help to create fixed rate long term mortgages
  • Creation of a new national shared ownership model

The Government also wants to build better, more beautiful places by:

  • Revisions to the NPPF to embed the principles of good design and place making
  • Respond to the Building Better, Building Beautiful commissions report
  • Using the National Model Design Code to promote the production of local design codes and guides.
  • Review the policies regarding building in flood zones
  • Introduction of a Future Homes standard reducing carbon emissions from new homes by 80%
  • Establishing a net zero development around Toton between Derby and Nottingham.

This list of proposals is ambitious but there is no mention of regional or strategic planning which has the potential to direct development to where it is really needed. However the ambition is to be welcomed, but some of the proposals such as building upwards run counter to improved building safety, heritage restrictions and other constraints and may be limited to very specific locations.

Jonathan Jenkin, Managing Director, Planning & Design Practice Ltd

Brexit is now ‘Done’ – The Outlook for Development in a Post Brexit Britain

PDP_Brexit

By Saturday morning, February 1st the UK will have left the European Union. With more than 3 years of uncertainty behind us, I am looking forward to a post Brexit future.

The turmoil over Brexit put a break on the development industry. Business slowed, the number of planning applications submitted in 2019 was 5% lower than in 2018 and the number of new homes being built also dropped.

As long as the economy of the UK can adjust and with good trade deals with the EU and the rest of the world the key drivers for the development industry and its capacity to deliver development have not changed.

The country needs new infrastructure. It needs better public transport, it needs new building for business and it needs many new homes. We must meet the basic needs for work and a secure home with the provision of educational and health facilities and somewhere to shop and we need to accommodate a growing population. With climate change we will need to de-carbonise and the challenge will be to bring development forward while also reducing the country’s carbon emissions.

The development industry will have to adopt new building techniques, planning will be increasingly important and will need to co-ordinate development with the provision of services to reduce the reliance on the private car. The development industry will have to take account of the cost of releasing carbon while also expanding its capacity to build, and increasing training.

Creating sustainable development will become increasingly difficult if we do not increase the environmental capacity of the earth. Development will need to be coupled with human interventions and changes in lifestyles. This will mean planting trees, taking carbon out of the atmosphere, creating more space for wildlife, enhancing biodiversity and reducing meat consumption, creating less waste and using locally sourced foods.It will also include constructing zero carbon buildings and locking carbon into buildings.

At Planning & Design Practice we are developing zero carbon homes. A sustainably sourced timber building locks up carbon, creating space to plant new trees. Using air source and ground source heat pumps powered by electricity from non- fossil fuel sources (including PV and battery storage) a new home can be reliably heated without the need to burn fossil fuels. We are also looking at retrofitting, re-using old buildings for new purposes and exploring circular cities, with the re-use of all building materials.

Climate change will foster changes in lifestyles, and can foster healthy cities and towns. Reductions in air pollution from lower car use, greater use of public transport, cycling and walking will make people fitter, reducing pressure on the health service. It will also foster greater social inclusion as people have to live more communal lives leading to less social isolation.

Jonathan Jenkin, Managing Director, Planning & Design Practice Ltd

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